According to a local sheriff, authorities are hunting down two men who fired guns from a vehicle trying to hit soldiers training at Camp Shelby Joint Forces Training Center near Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

Thankfully, no injuries have been reported.

More from the Associated Press via Perry County Sheriff Jimmy Dale Smith and WDAM-TV:

Mississippi’s National Guard said soldiers training at Camp Shelby reported hearing shots fired at 11:45 a.m. along Peret Tower Road, near the training facility. The facility is secure and all personnel accounted for and unharmed, the guard said in a news release.

Lt. Col. Christian Patterson said the shots were fired from a fringe road that runs along the eastern side of the base.

“We had soldiers who were training in the area and heard the shots. They reported it to their chain of command and then we reported it to the local authorities,” Patterson said.

The guard made no mention of whether the shots were believed to have been fired at troops but made clear that the shots are believed to have been fired from outside Camp Shelby.

Other area reports are saying that the vehicle is a red Ford Ranger with “broken arrow” written across the top.

The military installation currently houses 4,600 active-duty soldiers, both of the National Guard and reservists from Texas and Mississippi.

This also from the AP:

Patterson declined to specify if the soldiers training in the areas were National Guard members, active duty soldiers or reservists.

“Our statement is everyone is accounted for and training is continuing,” he said.

This summer’s training focuses on the coordinated efforts of individual soldiers acting as a platoon, which can vary in size but normally boasts 30-plus members.

The exercises, called “Exportable Combat Training Capability,” began in mid-July and will continue through mid-August.